Danny Thomas officially set one when he played his 177th league game for the club.
That saw him become Albion's new league appearance record holder.

Richard Thompson had previously held the mark with 176 until this season.
Thomas will be finally glad to officially hold the title after rather embarrassingly being credited with achieving the honour in 2007 by the annual rugby yearbook.
Mind you there are plenty of records around clubs and the leagues outside the Premiership that are not 'officially' recorded properly in publications.
One mark that does not seem to officially appear anywhere is the tag of oldest National Division One player. There is one for the Premiership and Graham Dawe appears high on that list having played in the top flight at the age of 39.
But Albion's chairman of rugby must surely have set a new Division One mark on Saturday when he took to the field for the final 10 minutes against Manchester.
Former England hooker Dawe turned 49 at the start of September and it is quite incredible that he can still mix it in professional rugby - not just on the local park in a merit table clash.

Stanley Matthews famously played professional football at 50 - and would anyone bet against Dawe matching his feat in rugby?
However, the rumours are that the feat would not be unique as Dawe’s ex-England front-row colleagues Jeff Probyn and Paul Rendall have both claimed to have played rugby since turning 50, albeit in the lower leagues.
“Forty-nine’s not a bad effort, but I was 51 when I played for Cleckheaton, so Dawesy’s got some way to go yet,” Probyn told a national newspaper this week.
However, according to reports in Yorkshire, Probyn was actually 47 when he turned out for Cleckheaton to help them out of a front-row crisis.
And even if he and Rendall did play at 50 there is a bit of difference between Division Three North/South, North One or London One than the now almost fully-professional National Division One.
Some people probably think Dawe shouldn't have sat on the bench on Saturday in the absence of the injured James Owen just because of his age.
But should age matter?
We often hear the argument 'if you are good enough, you are old enough' when a youngster is thrown in, so why shouldn't you have 'if you are good enough, you are young enough'?
People will say that it is not looking to the future calling on an old experienced head instead of an inexperienced youngster, but do supporters really care about next season or the season after?
If Albion had lost at home to Manchester after losing at Nottingham, how many supporters would have been satisfied with an after-match quote that went along the lines of 'yeah we lost but it's good for the future as a people got their first taste of National Division One rugby?'
Dawe, who was third choice hooker last season, knows he has to perform if he comes on as the whole rugby world will be ready to criticise him if he's not up to the task.
And his appearance on Saturday certainly livened up a Brickfields crowd that had gone quiet at Albion's lack to add to their three tries in the first 20 minutes. As soon as Dawe appeared on the touchline to come on to the field the chorus of 'who let the Dawe out...' rang out of the East Stand
Also the talk long after the game was not only about the stunning tries scored by Liam Gibson and Geoff Griffiths but of a great off-load and a flying tackle made by Dawe!
Dawe, though, did sit out Albion's development team's game at Exeter United on Monday night.
Albion fielded a genuine development team, with only four players over 23 and only two established National Division One players in their side.
Exeter, on the other hand, fielded an entire squad of recognised Division One players, including three of Albion's first team last season, and it was not major surprise that the Sandy Park side ran out comfortable winners.
Ed Lewsey, who had been voted The Herald’s player of the year last season by readers, had to make do with only being a replacement for Exeter, who did include Matt Jess – 17 league tries in 2007/08, Danny Gray – Division One’s fifth top kicker in 07/08, Mark Fatialofa, Sam Blythe, Gary Kingdom, Stephen Ward, Alan Miller and former fellow former Albion players Tom Hayes and Emyr Lewis in the starting line-up.
It was a good chance, though, for some of Albion's young players to show whether they are up to the standard to play in rugby's second tier.

Although they did lose heavily there were some encourages displays from some young Albion players who at least now know how big the gap between playing the likes of Torquay and Brixham and Division One.
Since it was set-up the Warriors has been a success in bringing through talent. Players like Lee Robinson, Lee and Tom Arscott, Mike Lewis and Mike Denbee are just some of the success stories.
And there are a new crop of youngsters this year hoping to make the grade in the Warriors and progress into the first team.
No comments:
Post a Comment